Here in a newly annotated edition are the two founding documents of
the United States of America: the Declaration of Independence (1776),
our great revolutionary manifesto, and the Constitution (1787–88),
in which “We the People” forged a new nation and built the
framework for our federal republic. Together with the Bill of Rights
and the Civil War amendments, these documents constitute what James
Madison called our “political scriptures” and have come to define
us as a people. Now a Pulitzer Prize–winning historian serves as a
guide to these texts, providing historical contexts and offering
interpretive commentary. In an introductory essay written for the
general reader, Jack N. Rakove provides a narrative political account
of how these documents came to be written. In his commentary on the
Declaration of Independence, Rakove sets the historical context for a
fuller appreciation of the important preamble and the list of charges
leveled against the Crown. When he glosses the Constitution, the Bill
of Rights, and the subsequent amendments, Rakove once again provides
helpful historical background, targets language that has proven
particularly difficult or controversial, and cites leading Supreme
Court cases. A chronology of events provides a framework for
understanding the road to Philadelphia. The general reader will not
find a better, more helpful guide to our founding documents than Jack
N. Rakove.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674054479
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter